Sea Shepherd says it can’t find Japan’s whaling fleet

SYDNEY – Environmental activist group Sea Shepherd said Monday it can’t locate a flotilla of Japanese whaling vessels in the vast Southern Ocean and asked the Australian government to “kindly provide the coordinates.”

The Sea Shepherd flagship Steve Irwin left Western Australia for the remote area on Jan. 18 to chase and disrupt the annual hunt, which resumed in December after a one-year pause despite a worldwide moratorium and widespread condemnation.

A decade of harassment by Sea Shepherd led to Japan being forced to abandon the 2014-2015 hunt after the International Court of Justice said its expeditions are commercial activities masquerading as research.

The government maintains it is trying to prove that the whale population is large enough to sustain a return to commercial hunting and says it has to kill the mammals to carry out its research properly.

“The Japanese whaling fleet has greatly expanded their area of illegal operations in the Southern Ocean. This makes finding them very difficult,” Sea Shepherd founder Paul Watson said.

Australia, which has led global efforts to persuade Japan to halt whaling, has previously floated the idea of sending a customs vessel to monitor the hunt in the Southern Ocean, but it appears not to have followed through.

“Sea Shepherd was expecting that Australia or New Zealand would uphold their obligations as responsible members of the International Whaling Commission, to send a ship to intercept the Japanese whaling fleet,” Watson said. “This does not seem to be something Australia or New Zealand are willing to do.”

He called on Canberra to provide Sea Shepherd with the exact coordinates of the whaling fleet “so that Sea Shepherd can do the job that Australia and New Zealand refuse to do.”

“If Australia or New Zealand can kindly provide the coordinates, Sea Shepherd can stop the continuing illegal operations of the renegade outlaw Japanese whaling fleet,” he said.

Australian Environment Minister Greg Hunt was noncommittal Monday when asked if the government would send a ship or provide coordinates.

“We do not accept in any way, shape or form the concept of killing whales for so-called scientific research,” his spokesperson said. “We will continue to urge Japan to pursue nonlethal methods of research and end its unnecessary whaling program.

“Australia is committed to the protection of whales and we will continue to work with the international community to promote whale conservation and uphold the global moratorium on commercial whaling.”